Although the plotline of the film is quite common, what makes the film special is its uniqueness and the element of impersonation. The story of the film portrays an engaged girl and a guy who makes her fall in love with him and now the girl has to choose between the two. Minnale is a Tamil romantic film directed by debutant Gautham Menon, starring Madhavan, Reema Sen, and Abbas.Īctors Nagesh and Vivek are also present in pivotal roles. It was remade in Hindi as Ek Deewana Tha starring Amy Jackson and Pratiek Babbar.Īlso Read: Best Telugu Romantic Movies Minnale (2001) the film was simultaneously shot in Telugu as Ye Maaya Chesave with Naga Chaitanya and Samantha Ruth Prabhu. It’s a story of a Malayali Christian girl and a boy. Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa is a Tamil Romantic drama film starring Simbhu and Trisha in the lead roles.
#2015 TAMIL HIT MOVIES MOVIE#
The best part about the movie is that it is a family film which deals with love after love failure. The film stars Arya, Jai, Nazriya Nazim and Nayantara in the main roles coupled with Santhanam, Sathyaraj and Sathyan in supporting roles. Atlee’s previous works include Enthiran in 2010 and Nanban in 2012 under the aegis of Shankar. Raja Rani (2013)ĭirected by debutant Atlee, Raja Rani is a Tamil romantic film. The film also shows the comeback of star director Mani Ratnam who has made a movie for each and every generation. The story of the film is a pretty, original and contemporary tale of modern-day love and live-in relationships set in an urban background. The star cast of the film includes Dulquer Salmaan and Nithya Menen in the lead roles coupled with Prakash Raj and Leela Samson in supporting roles. Here are the 10 Best Horror Films of 2015.O Kadhal Kanmani or OK Kanmani is a Tamil rom-com film directed by Mani Ratnam. New horror auteurs from David Robert Mitchell ( It Follows) to Leo Gabriadze ( Unfriended) burst onto the scene, and established visionaries like Guillermo del Toro ( Crimson Peak) followed their dreams/nightmares. But even the franchises seemed to go in new directions: Sinister 2 wound up being less about scares and more about characters Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension, in what is promised to be the series' last installment, finally showed us just what exactly was going on in those creepily static, digitally-shot shadows.īut even though we lost a legend last fall - rest in peace, Wes Craven - 2015 will be remembered as a year of fresh faces and revivals. And the "mumblegore" movement that had been creating a stir for the Fantastic Fest demographic and in semi-underground horror circles started to make an even bigger noise over the past 12 months (just don't call it "deathwave"). The good folks at Blumhouse ( Paranormal Activity, The Purge, Insidious, etc.) still had their fingers in most of the horror pots. This was the year, after all, that someone finally released a Poltergeist reboot - and did just well enough that we can probably expect another one. That's not to say that there still weren't plenty of remakes and sequels. Night Shyamalan returned to the genre, with one of his smallest, strangest, most playful movies in years – and won back some of the critical acclaim that had eluded him for some years. But this year, the landscape was dominated by more independent, idiosyncratic films: Oddball festival favorites, loopy genre-crossovers, and auteur passion projects. For a long time, studio-released films and blatant nostalgia plays had been dominating the genre - with movies like The Conjuring, Mama and the Insidious franchise, not to mention a whole host of other remakes and sequels, coming out like a steady drumbeat.